By Dominik Sipiński (Gazeta Wyborcza).
We are in 2030. The European Union, still divided on the question of atomic energy, investing at a snail's pace in renewable energy sources and consuming exorbitant fossil fuels, is unable to cope alone with the increase in energy needs. Fortunately, in its vicinity, a country can come to its aid: Morocco first becomes the electric battery of the Iberian Peninsula, then of an increasingly important portion of the Union.
The African kingdom, which has large expanses of desert, sunny and windy, enjoys ideal conditions for the installation of photovoltaic and wind farms.
Alongside the Europe-Maghreb gas pipeline, which transports gas from Algeria, Morocco supplies Europe with thousands of gigawatt hours produced from renewable sources.
The wind turbines are built by European companies, such as the Spanish…
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